Fоr the purpose of showing that the decree of divorce rendered by the court in Georgia is without legal validity in North Carolina the plaintiff introduced the judgment roll, from which it appears that the defendant in the action was served with constructive and not with personal serviсe of process. If the decree is a nullity here the plaintiff is not estopped by its introduction, “for what the law pronounces void cannot estop.”
Gathings v. Williams,
Between void and voidable marriages the law recognizes a distinction which applies to the status of the parties before the marriage relation is
*537
dissolved. A voidable marriage is valid for all civil purposes until annulled by a competent tribunal in a direct proceeding, but a void marriage is a nullity and may be impeached at any time. Sehouler’s Marriage, etc., sec. 1081;
Johnson v. Kincade,
The General Assembly has provided that all marriages between persons either of whom has a husband or wife living at the time of such marriage shall be void, and that the aggrieved party may seek relief in the Superior Court, which has succeeded to the functions of the ecclesiastical courts of England. C. S., 1658, 2495;
Gathings v. Williams, supra; Johnson v. Kincade, supra; Setzer v. Setzer,
The cause of action is founded almost entirely upon documentary evidence which is made a part of the case on appeal. It is admitted that the defendant has all her life been a resident of Nоrth Carolina and at the commencement of the action was a resident of Durham County. In the year 1907, in this State, she married a man named John A. Dowd, who afterwards left North Carolina and went to Bichmond County, in the State of Georgia. There he brought suit against his wife, the present defendаnt, for divorce from the bonds of matrimony. The Code of Georgia provided as one of the grounds for total divorce the “wilful and continued desertion by either of the parties for the term of three years.”
In his petition Dowd alleged that he and Mary Cheek, the defendant, had intеrmarried in due form of law and had since been husband and wife; that he had been a bona fide resident of the State of Georgia for *538 twelve months before the filing of his application for divorce; that on 1 May, 1913, his wife deserted him without any cause on his part; that her desertion оf him was wilful and had been continuous up to 25 May, 1916, the date his petition was filed; that his wife was a nonresident of the State of Georgia; and that her address was unknown to him. It was thereupon ordered that service be perfected on the defendant by publication in a public gazеtte of the county in which legal advertisements were published, and upon certificate of the publisher it was “ordered that due and legal service on the defendant had been made and perfected.” The defendant was served with process only in this way; she neither aрpeared in person or by attorney nor filed an answer. At July Term, 1916, the court adjudged, two concurring verdicts having-been rendered in accordance with the law of Georgia, that the marriage contract entered into between the parties in the case be declared to be set aside and dissolved as fully and effectually as if no such contract had been made and that both parties might marry again.
Upon these undisputed facts the plaintiff contends that the judgment rendered in the Georgia Court is void in North Carolina as against the defendаnt and that at the time of his pretended intermarriage with her she was disqualified by reason of her former marriage to enter into another matrimonial contract.
It is a settled principle of law that a personal judgment rendered in the court of one state against a nоnresident merely upon constructive service without acquiring jurisdiction of the person of the defendant, is void by operation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States: “Nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.”
Pennoyer v. Neff,
If a husband and his wife аre domiciled in the same state there exists jurisdiction in such state to enter a decree of divorce which will be entitled to enforcement in another state by virtue of the full faith and credit clause; and if a bona fide domicile has been acquired in a state by one оf the parties to the marriage and a suit for divorce is brought in
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such state by the domiciled party, the courts of that state, if they acquire personal jurisdiction of the other party, have authority to enter a decree of divorce entitled to be enforced in every state by reason of the full. faith and credit clause.
Cheever v. Wilson,
In the light of these principles it is important to know what this Court has said in opinions dealing directly with the subject.
In
Irby v. Wilson,
There are several cases in which this opinion has been reaffirmed.
Gathings v. Williams,
supra;
Davidson v. Sharpe,
In
Bidwell v. Bidwell,
The statement in the
Bidwell case
was obiter, apparently founded on
Atherton v. Atherton,
Error.
